What are your hot takes on breakthroughs that could be just around the corner? How do you think they will impact humanity? Are they a cause for hope or despair?
There is so much exciting stuff just around the corner, but some of the potentially mostly influential that i think could happen in my lifetime are, IMO:
-quantum computing. would revolutionise many areas of science where we are currently limited by the fundamental efficiency of classical computers, even huge supercomputers.
-human germline editing. scary but i think it will become widespread. there have already been some designed embryos, i don't recall whether they were implanted and carried to term. i hope this can be used as a force for good but i don't have enough faith in humanity to think it will be.
-discovery of alien life. i don't care if its a single celled organism it would just be awesome and a huge opportunity to learn. tbh i'd be a bit scared if we contacted intelligent life.
what would you add to the list?
Organic chemistry is likely to get more and more automated.
I am not yet predicting "auto synthesis machines" where you draw a structure and it spits out a product with optimized reactions, but there are a lot of steps of medicinal chemistry that are becoming much higher throughput and much more automated.
I expect to see more modular carbon-carbon coupling reactions that will simplify retrosyntheses and decrease the range of precursors needed by a lab. There has already been tremendous progress recently with some strategies, and i expect them to become more widespread and powerful.
Second, i expect automation to allow for high throughout screening of reactions in a much more timely manner, performing the reactions and analysis of the products autonomously.
Finally i predict more techniques that utilize transient extreme states such as cavitation bubbles formed during sonication to perform reactions that formerly needed harsher conditions with gentler reactants.
All and all, I expect chemists to be spending more of their time doing higher level tasks and automation taking over a lot more of the grind.
There is so much exciting stuff just around the corner, but some of the potentially mostly influential that i think could happen in my lifetime are, IMO:
-quantum computing. would revolutionise many areas of science where we are currently limited by the fundamental efficiency of classical computers, even huge supercomputers.
-human germline editing. scary but i think it will become widespread. there have already been some designed embryos, i don't recall whether they were implanted and carried to term. i hope this can be used as a force for good but i don't have enough faith in humanity to think it will be.
-discovery of alien life. i don't care if its a single celled organism it would just be awesome and a huge opportunity to learn. tbh i'd be a bit scared if we contacted intelligent life.
what would you add to the list?
Organic chemistry is likely to get more and more automated.
I am not yet predicting "auto synthesis machines" where you draw a structure and it spits out a product with optimized reactions, but there are a lot of steps of medicinal chemistry that are becoming much higher throughput and much more automated.
I expect to see more modular carbon-carbon coupling reactions that will simplify retrosyntheses and decrease the range of precursors needed by a lab. There has already been tremendous progress recently with some strategies, and i expect them to become more widespread and powerful.
Second, i expect automation to allow for high throughout screening of reactions in a much more timely manner, performing the reactions and analysis of the products autonomously.
Finally i predict more techniques that utilize transient extreme states such as cavitation bubbles formed during sonication to perform reactions that formerly needed harsher conditions with gentler reactants.
All and all, I expect chemists to be spending more of their time doing higher level tasks and automation taking over a lot more of the grind.
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